GEORGIA BASIN INITIATIVE LEGACY RIPPLES THROUGH TIME: “If we have lost anything in the last 30 years, it is a strong provincial commitment to supporting community and regional planning,” stated Joan Sawicki, land and resource management champion, and former provincial cabinet minister
Note to Reader:
Published by the Partnership for Water Sustainability in British Columbia, Waterbucket eNews celebrates the leadership of individuals and organizations who are guided by the Living Water Smart vision. Storylines accommodate a range of reader attention spans. Read the headline and move on, or take the time to delve deeper – it is your choice! Downloadable versions are available at Living Water Smart in British Columbia: The Series.
The edition published on April 30, 2024 features Joan Sawicki and her “story behind the story” of the genesis and early years of the Georgia Basin Initiative in the 1990s. The edition is dedicated to Darlene Marzari, former BC Ministry of Municipal Affairs, and champion of community and regional planning. Darlene Marzari was the single most important reason for the success of the Georgia Basin Initiative, says Joan Sawicki,
Joan Sawicki and Darlene Marzari at the announcement for the Urban Salmon Habitat Program at Deer Lake in Burnaby, 1995
Georgia Basin Initiative legacy ripples thru time
The Georgia Basin links two nations and includes the Strait of Juan de Fuca, the Strait of Georgia, Puget Sound, the adjacent lowlands of Vancouver Island, the lower mainland and the slopes of the mountain ranges surrounding and draining into this area.
The three bodies of water are collectively known as the Salish Sea. This bioregion is one of the most ecologically diverse areas of North America, containing a wide range of vegetation and fish and wildlife habitats of international significance. It is also one of the most threatened.
Creating a Sustainable Future
Launched in 1994, the Georgia Basin Initiative was a call to action by the provincial government led by Premier Mike Harcourt. The influence of the Georgia Basin Initiative has rippled through time in profound and lasting ways. In 2024, we celebrate the 30th anniversary of a watershed moment in BC history.
The living legacy of the Georgia Basin Initiative is embedded in and embodied by the Georgia Basin Inter-Regional Educational Initiative. Led by the Partnership for Water Sustainability and supported by five regional districts, the IREI is now in Year 13 and provides peer-based education among local governments.
The idea for the Georgia Basin Initiative was spawned in a report by BC Round Table on the Environment and the Economy, chaired by Mayor Joy Leach. Published in late 1993, the Round Table report was titled Georgia Basin Initiative: Creating a Sustainable Future.
When the stars align, anything is possible
“The 1990s was a very heady time in government in terms of land use planning and natural resource management. Some initiatives were not implemented all that well, but the Georgia Basin Initiative was the exception,” recalls Joan Sawicki. She was the Parliamentary Secretary for the Georgia Basin Initiative during the period 1994-1996.
“It did exactly what it was intended to do, Moreover, even though it only existed as an entity for a couple of years, it spawned a whole number of other initiatives and programs, some of which blossomed and still exist today.”
A legacy of “convening for action” in the Georgia Basin
Within a few years, the Georgia Basin Initiative led to a federal-provincial agreement to collaborate under the umbrella of the Georgia Basin Ecosystem Initiative. The first 5-year plan covered the years 1998 through 2003.
The Georgia Basin Action Plan, an evolution of the GBEI, then covered the second 5-year period from 2003 through 2008. The current IREI follows in the footsteps of the GBEI and GBAP. Three decades and counting is an amazing legacy.
EDITOR’S PERSPECTIVE / CONTEXT FOR BUSY READER
“For the past 16 months, I have been drawing on my lived experience to compile a legacy resource which is a chronicle of the green infrastructure journey in the Metro Vancouver region. Who did what, why, and how,” stated Kim Stephens, Waterbucket eNews Editor and Partnership Executive Director.
“The chronicle covers the period 1997 through 2023 and will be released later in 2024. The chronicle tells the story through quotable quotes.”
Understand and learn from the past to chart a course forward in tumultuous times
“The chronicle is structured in increments of time, for example, 2018 through 2023. These increments are bracketed by watershed moments. The period 1997 through 2005 was a transformational era in BC history. The seeds were planted in the first half of the 1990s with the Georgia Basin Initiative.”
“An understanding of lessons learned in the 1990s could and should inform a path forward in 2024. To that end, I have supplemented my lived experience by conducting interviews with key players from that era of bold thinking and innovation.”
“Joan Sawicki, former elected representative at the local and provincial scales, was one such agent of change. In this edition of Waterbucket eNews, Joan Sawicki brings an exciting era to life with reflections that are fascinating, illuminating and prompt this question:
Will another Darlene Marzari emerge as Minister of Municipal Affairs and be the provincial champion for community and regional planning?
“Being an effective champion requires deep knowledge, experience and quiet resolve to make things happen, says Joan Sawicki.”
Because there was trouble in paradise…
“With the change of government in late 1991, all of a sudden land use planning and natural resource management was front and centre,” states Joan Sawicki.
“We had Mike Harcourt as Premier and Darlene Marzari as Minister of Municipal Affairs. Both had come out of local government. They were very familiar with the urgent growth pressures and the ecological impacts that they were having.”
“Then I was appointed Marzari’s Parliamentary Secretary and really wanted something substantive to do. I, too, had spent a term as an elected Councillor in Burnaby. So the Georgia Basin Initiative was a good fit for me.”
“I was also already a keen student of ‘Our Common Future’. As a naïve new Councilor, I actually bought 5 copies of the book and plunked them on the desks of all our Directors in Burnaby, including Finance and Engineering.”
STORY BEHIND THE STORY: Georgia Basin Initiative legacy ripples thru time – extracts from a conversation with Joan Sawicki
“It is important to understand the political environment at the time,” stresses Joan Sawicki.
“The 1980s was a pretty stagnant period in terms of positive government initiatives related to land use and natural resource management. But there were rumblings of discontent; it manifested itself most directly with growing concern over the logging of old growth forests.”
The Brundtland Commission introduced a new idea called ‘sustainable development’
“The Georgia Basin Initiative was a deliberate attempt to do that. Change policies and institutions.”
“The Brundtland Commission introduced this alternate world of so-called ‘sustainable development’. And it talked about protecting 12% of the land base. Think about that! Now people are talking 30 and even 50 percent but at that time 12% was a real shocker!”
“There was a key point that really resonated with me and that was this idea that…structurally, we set up our governments in vertical silos – like Forests, Health, Environment, Economic Development – but ecosystems exist horizontally as integrated systems.”
With the change of government in 1991, land use planning was front and centre
“Upon election in late 1991, Premier Mike Harcourt gave the recently appointed BC Round Table on the Environment and the Economy a new mandate. In late 1993, they submitted Georgia Basin Initiative: Creating a Sustainable Future.”
“With a strong Minister of Municipal Affairs, Darlene Marzari, the ‘settlement side’ of land use planning went straight into regional planning and the Growth Strategies Act.”
“A long-time planner with the ministry, Erik Karlsen was a key ingredient. He not only had the passion and understanding for this stuff and was way ahead of his time, but he also had an unparalleled network of connection with Georgia Basin communities – and, most importantly, a high degree of trust with those communities.”
When top-down meets bottom-up…
“In my experience, governments tend to work in one of two modes. It is either crisis management, when something happens and government has to ‘do something’…or at least be seen to be doing something. Or, at the other end, governments produce lofty, visionary reports and announcements that, while suitably aspirational, too often sit on the shelf unable to be implemented.”
“That is just the reality of human nature. That includes the gap that often exists between what the public say they want in the long-term and what they demand or will accept in the short-term.”
“As Parliamentary Secretary, I had a visionary document and strong personal support from Minister Marzari at the top. And I had Erik Karlsen’s on-the-ground connections with Basin communities and their issues. All I had to do was run with it. And that’s what we did! “
“The Georgia Basin Initiative was successful because we had the right people at the right time doing the right thing. How rare is that in government?”
So, what did the Georgia Basin Initiative actually do?
“There was a clear understanding and consensus on the challenges – that the Georgia Basin was one of the most ecologically diverse regions and also one of the most threatened.”
“There was trouble in paradise. All communities knew they were under intense pressures and that we had to do something about it.”
The mandate was work with everybody:
“But, we also had been given a clear vision along with sustainability principles. Much of that came from the Round Table’s work. It also fed into and from Darlene’s Growth Strategies Act for regional planning.”
“Erik and I were told that the intent of the Georgia Basin Initiative was to be both proactive and reactive. That was our job. Just get out there. Talk to all the stakeholders. Find out what was needed. Work with everybody, including cross-border because it was bioregional thinking.”
“Darlene Marzari was a very astute minister; she sent us out there but she did not just cut us loose. She demanded clear work plans. And accountability, with regular report backs, etc. So, the Georgia Basin Initiative was an entity that had it all from top to bottom.”
Because conversations lead to dialogue which in turn will lead to consensus
“Most of my work was just going out to Basin communities. Talking and listening to everybody and everything. Raising public awareness. Erik set that all up. He had his fingers in almost every pie.”
“I often felt like a travelling preacher spreading the gospel of bioregional thinking throughout the Region. When I look back at the number of workshops, conferences, and meetings we attended…no wonder we were exhausted! It was a very fast-paced couple of years.”
“We tried not to come empty-handed. We had a small grants program. Erik Karlsen pinpointed the best projects that the Province could support. When communities told us they needed some planning tools, we worked on that. We put out newsletters so that people in the Region could learn from each other…and some of those programs could grow.”
And so, the GBI spawned a movement
“The Georgia Basin Initiative did not survive the 1996 election as a stand-alone entity. There were lots of reasons for this.”
“We had a new premier with a new mandate. Darlene did not run again and, after re-election, I was given a new assignment. But the thinking behind the GBI continued. The seeds had been sown. And they flourished.”
“When you think of other initiatives, like Urban Salmon Habitat Program in 1995; the Fish Protection Act in 1997; riparian protection regulations, The Stewardship Series; Salmon in the City; Fraser Basin Council, Georgia Basin Ecosystem Initiative.”
“The Fish Protection Act itself did not fall out of the sky. It too had a story. The Georgia Basin Initiative and the Round Table work were part of the story that allowed the Fish Protection Act to come into being – because people had come to understand the critical role of fish habitat and healthy streams as indicators of local and regional sustainability.”
“When you peel back the skin of the Fish Protection Act, the Urban Salmon Habitat Program not only raised awareness, it reflected what people in communities were saying. Sometimes things just come together. And when they do, WOW! Those times are not very common.”
“If I were to identify the single most important reason for the success of the Georgia Basin Initiative, I would say it was Darlene Marzari. If we have lost anything in the last 30 years, it is a strong provincial commitment to community and regional planning.”
The single most important reason for the success of the Georgia Basin Initiative
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Will another Darlene Marzari emerge, and when?
“When you think of the issues we face today….weather extremes, drying rivers, degraded streams, frequent wildfires, population growth, housing affordability…they are no different than they were 30 years ago. They are just more complex and more urgent.”
“WE NEED A RENEWED PROVINCIAL EMPHASIS – and yes, that means budget – ON SUPPORTING COMMUNITY AND REGIONAL PLANNING. AND WE NEED ANOTHER DARLENE MARZARI,” concludes Joan Sawicki.
Living Water Smart in British Columbia Series
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